social security

We’re getting to the point that someone’s going to have to look up what comes after a trillion. We’re not sure what that number is, but we know it has a whole lot of zeroes. Almost as many zeroes as you can find sitting in the United States Congress.

The federal government’s financial condition deteriorated rapidly last year, far beyond the $1.5 trillion in new debt taken on to finance the budget deficit, a USA TODAY analysis shows.

USA Today? When a reliably liberal publication like USA Today blows the whistle on a Democrat administration, you know things are going somewhat less than swimmingly.

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We love Dr. Walter Williams. He’s one of those economists who cuts through the crap and tells it like it is. You might not like it, but you have to respect the George Mason University professor’s honestly and bluntness.

The latest Social Security Trustees Report tells us that the program will be insolvent by the year 2037.

The combined unfunded liability of Social Security and Medicare has reached nearly $107 trillion in today’s dollars. That is about seven times the size of the U.S. economy and 10 times the size of the national debt. Those entitlement programs, along with others, account for nearly 60 percent of federal spending. They are what Congress calls non-discretionary spending.

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If you’ve been counting on Medicare to pay for your aches and pains in your sunset years and Social Security to pay for your pina coladas, you may need a Plan B.

Turns out both programs are falling apart faster than a Habitat For Humanity house.

Consider the evidence presented by the National Journal:

The country’s two marquee social insurance programs, Social Security and Medicare, face worsening fiscal conditions driven by near-term economic challenges and long-term trends of population aging and health care costs, according to the annual report released by the two entitlements’ board of trustees.

The trust funds of Treasury bonds that provide back-stop funding for the programs will be exhausted sooner than anticipated: the Medicare hospital insurance fund will exhaust five years sooner than previously expected, in 2024, and the Social Security trust fund will expire in 2036, a year earlier than last projected.

The trustees, led by Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, concluded the two programs are not on a sustainable path and that legislative action will be needed to avoid “disruptive consequences” to benificiaries (sic) and taxpayers.

Unfortunately, it looks like both of these programs may die long before you do.

Source: National Journal

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Is it just me, or is Ron Paul’s star rising bright enough that he might have a good shot at actually winning the Republican nomination for 2012? He’s going to make headlines beating up Bernanke this year, and now that people have witnessed what the banks and the Fed can do to our country, many are seeing he’s not the crackpot some have him out to be. In this video, this week’s “Straight Talk” message, he lays bare the fraud of Social Security.

Transcript:

(emphasis’ are mine)

Perhaps the biggest media story of 2010 was the influence of Tea Party voters on the Congressional landscape. The new Congress comes to Capitol Hill with a mandate to end profligate spending and restore fiscal sanity in Washington, we are told. But when the House and Senate convene in January the newly elected members will face tremendous pressure to maintain spending levels for entitlement programs. Even the most modest proposals to trim Social Security or Medicare spending will be met with howls of indignation and threats of voter revolt. Legislators who propose any kind of means testing or increased retirement ages can expect angry visits from senior citizens and lobbyists ready to fund a candidate back home who supports the status quo.

But millions of Americans now realize that the status quo is an illusion that will not last even another 10 or 20 years. The federal government cannot continue to spend a trillion dollars more than it collects in revenue each year because we are running out of creditors. Fiscal reality is setting in and the consequences may be grim, even if Congress finds the courage to take decisive action now.

Courage begins with a commitment to see things as they are, rather than how we wish they were. When it comes to Social Security we must understand that the system does not represent an old age pension, an insurance program or even a forced savings program. It simply represents an enormous transfer of payment with younger workers paying taxes to benefit the other beneficiaries. There is no Social Security trust fund and you don’t have an account. Whether you win or lose the Social Security lottery is a function of when you happen to be born and how long you live to collect benefits. Of course young people today have every reason to believe they will never collect those benefits.

Notice that neither political party proposes letting people opt out of Social Security, which exposes the lie that your contributions are set aside and saved. After all, if your contributions are really set aside for your retirement, the money is there earning interest, right? If your money is in your account, what difference would it make if your neighbor chooses not to participate in the program?

The truth of course is that your contributions are not put aside. Social Security is a simple tax. Like all taxes, the money collected is spent immediately as general revenue to fund the federal government. But no administration will admit that Social Security is nothing more than an accounting ledger with no money. You will collect benefits only if future tax revenues remain high. The money you paid into the system is long gone.

My hope is that at least some members of the new Congress will cut through the distortions to see Social Security as it really is. The best way to fix the impending Social Security crisis is also the simplest: Allow younger individuals to opt out of the program and use their tax savings to invest privately as they see fit. This is the true private solution. Your money has never been safe in the government’s hands and it never will be.

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If you were worried about Social Security running out of money, forget about it! Barack Obama’s fiscal commission is made some bold recommendations to help save your retirement fund from extinction. So bold are the recommended measures that we could see riots breaking out by seniors as early as 2049.

The 18-member panel recommends among other things, a very slow rise in the retirement age, to 67 to 68 by 2050 and to 69 by 2075.

Do these people realize the ridiculousness of even trying to set a retirement age for 40 – 65 years in the future? Do they understand the exponential increase in the advancement of science and technology that will see humans living productive lives into their hundreds by the mid 21st century, let alone predictions of living indefinitely through the advancements in regenerative organs, elimination of disease, cyborg robotic addons, and more. For any doubters, a good place to start reading is Ray Kurzweil, particularly his book, The Singularity.

If you’re holding your breath for the government to save Social Security, forget it. These idiot’s decisions move us closer and closer to economic collapse on a daily basis.

Source: Yahoo Finance

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